Lucinda Williams - Car Wheels on a Gravel Road (1998)
Tracklist front / back album covers
Lucinda Williams - Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
play / listen download rar
"Right in Time" – 4:35
"Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" – 4:44
"2 Kool 2 Be 4-gotten" – 4:42
"Drunken Angel" – 3:20
"Concrete and Barbed Wire" – 3:08
"Lake Charles" – 5:27
"Can't Let Go" (Randy Weeks) – 3:28
"I Lost It" – 3:31
"Metal Firecracker" – 3:30
"Greenville" – 3:23
Emmylou Harris on harmony vocals
"Still I Long For Your Kiss" (Williams, Duane Jarvis) – 4:09
"Joy" – 4:01
"Jackson" – 3:42
Lucinda Williams Band Members / Musicians
Lucinda Williams – vocals, acoustic guitar, Dobro guitar
Gurf Morlix – electric guitar, 12 string electric guitar, electric slide guitar, harmony vocal, acoustic slide guitar
John Ciambotti – bass guitar, upright bass
Donald Lindley – drums, percussion
Buddy Miller – acoustic guitar, mando guitar, harmony vocal, electric guitar
Ray Kennedy – 12 string electric guitar
Greg Leisz – 12 string electric guitar, mandolin
Roy Bittan – Hammond B3 organ, accordion, organ
Jim Lauderdale – harmony vocal
Charlie Sexton – electric guitar, Dobro guitar
Steve Earle – acoustic guitar, harmonica, harmony vocal, resonator guitar
Johnny Lee Schell – electric guitar, electric slide guitar, Dobro guitar
Bo Ramsey – electric guitar, slide guitar
Micheal Smotherman – B-3 organ
Richard "Hombre" Price – Dobro guitar
Emmylou Harris – harmony vocal
Car Wheels on a Gravel Road is the 5th studio album by American singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams. It was recorded and co-produced by Williams in Nashville, Tennessee and Canoga Park, California, before being released on June 30, 1998, by Mercury Records. The album features guest appearances by Steve Earle and Emmylou Harris.
Car Wheels on a Gravel Road won a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album, and received a nomination for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance for the single "Can't Let Go". It was Williams' first album to go gold, and remains her best-selling album to date, with 872,000 copies sold in the US as of October 2014. Universally acclaimed by critics, it was voted as the best album of 1998 in The Village Voice's annual Pazz & Jop critics poll.
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